Michael Tsai / 6/27/2004 / 3:11 PM wrote:
That's word characters and digits; we want to include spaces.
Ah! White space and space are not the same! D'oh!
Thanks for your help!
--
- Hiro
[PROTECTED]
[PROTECTED] [PROTECTED]
I have Powermail 5.0.1 on a PowerBook G3 Pismo 1GB / 20 GB running 10.3.2
Recently I was able to (finally) sign up to broadband - they've only just
upgraded the local telephone exchange here in the countryside west of
Oxford, England. Huzzah.
Now that I am on broadband, I switched from being a
. (I assume you remain a PM user though, so I won't say goodbye;-)
Yes, you're not getting rid of me that easily. ;-)
Mainly at this point I want some time off, to do the things that matter
most to me at the moment... spend some quality time with my wife and
daughter, spend a couple of weeks
On Jun 27, 2004, at 2:08 PM, A-NO-NE Music wrote:
But I was just interested in (\s|\S). To me, it looks contradiction.
How does this work?
It means whitespace or non-whitespace, in other words, any character.
That's what I thought, but why not (\w|\d)?
That's word characters and digits;
On 27/06/2004 at 7:51 PM I saw computer artwork by subhash type:
I already have multiple opportunities that
have presented themselves to me, ...
I want some time off ...
Then best wishes for your change!
Ditto.
Thank you very much for you input and presence here. [And at Apple].
Kename
Check for two things:
1. The order in which the filters are applied.
2. Stop applying filters to this message which is near the bottom of
the dialogue box when you view the filter.
I think you could accomplish this (depending on all your other filters)
by doing the list filter first without
make sure that 'stop applying filter...' checkbox is enabled - if not, it
will just continue down the filter list.
---marlyse
former message(s) quotes: -
No matter what I do the emails refuse to follow the set parameters...is
there something I may be overlooking?
Yes, this is a good opportunity to thank you Wayne for all the help you
have given us in the past. Wishing you well with your change - hope you
going to like the new adventures and challenges such a change usually
brings. (I assume you remain a PM user though, so I won't say goodbye;-)
Hello listers,
I have Powermail 5.0.1 on a PowerBook G3 Pismo 1GB / 20 GB running 10.3.2
Recently I was able to (finally) sign up to broadband - they've only just
upgraded the local telephone exchange here in the countryside west of
Oxford, England. Huzzah.
Now that I am on broadband, I
[Wayne Brissette [EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb am 27.6.2004 um 11:43 Uhr:]
I already have multiple opportunities that
have presented themselves to me, ...
I want some time off ...
Then best wishes for your change!
--
http://www.subhash.at
Besides wishing you well in your new endeavors, I hope that the PowerMail
users will be able to continue to benefit from your wise advise.
Midi
Wayne caused electrons to hula in cyberspace with:
Everything changes and while I disagree with the
reasons for this particular change, it's time for
On Jun 27, 2004, at 11:36 AM, A-NO-NE Music wrote:
I have trouble getting used to Regex. That huge volume of Perl man is
not exactly easy to read for non native English speaker (excuses,
excuses...).
You might find Friedel's regex book easier. It's slimmer and, I think,
clearer.
But I
One another question is that does AppleScript take Regex?
It doesn't. Regular expressions (Regex) are only useful with languages or
applications like BBedit which included them. One way to use regular
expressions within AppleScript is to use the command line and something
like awk or sed which
But then, no other user is able to use them or I'm I wrong? That was my
point to put them where they are.
I haven't tried this, but you might be able to make aliases for each
item. Leave the master copy in your folder, then you wouldn't have to
worry about them again when you upgraded PowerMail
Sounds a little bit sadly, doesn't it?
Yes and no. I'm sad only because I've had the pleasure of working with a
fine group of people for close to 10 years. However, leaving the company
is another story. Everything changes and while I disagree with the
reasons for this particular change, it's
Michael Tsai / 04.6.26 / 6:22PM wrote:
create a SpamSieve blocklist rule that says Body Matches Regex:
(Status: 5\.2\.2 \(mailbox full\)(\s|\S)*){2,}
I have trouble getting used to Regex. That huge volume of Perl man is
not exactly easy to read for non native English speaker (excuses,
Michael Tsai [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
(Status: 5\.2\.2 \(mailbox full\)(\s|\S)*){2,}
hmm... interesting!
I try immediately...
Thank you!
Hervé
--
remove .listes and add a dot after fh please
enlevez .listes et ajoutez un point après fh
[Jim Pistrang [EMAIL PROTECTED] schrieb am 27.6.2004 um 10:02 Uhr:]
Put them in the Custom Scripts folder inside your PowerMail Files folder.
But then, no other user is able to use them or I'm I wrong? That was my
point to put them where they are.
--
http://www.subhash.at
Hi subhash (or whoever you are!),
I have put all my AppleScripts for PM in the folder Power Mail Scripts
of Power Mail Additions to let all user be able to use them.
So I have to copy them to the new Power Mail package every time a new
update is available. Is there a way to avoid this?
Put them
Some of you probably have already noticed this, but in the latest version
of the AppleScript menu in PowerMail there is now an item that allows you
to Go to the AppleScript Archive page. Some people on this already also
know that I currently work for Apple Computer. My position at Apple is
moving
I have put all my AppleScripts for PM in the folder Power Mail Scripts
of Power Mail Additions to let all user be able to use them.
So I have to copy them to the new Power Mail package every time a new
update is available. Is there a way to avoid this?
--
http://www.subhash.at
On Jun 26, 2004, at 12:22 PM, listes wrote:
Then I need a classical filter. I set something up, which says
- if sender is that mailserver
- if title is non-distribution issue (or the exact sentence I know)
- if body contains Status: 5.2.2 (mailbox full)
(for all these conditions
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